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EY She | | * ESTABLISHBD BY JOSEPH PVLAITZER, Published Daily Except Sunde Publishing Company, Nos, 53 to w York. os Ravn ru "are, President, 6% Park Row. J. ANGUS 4" Park Row, PULTE: Seater ae Abe Row, be Office at New York as Second’) World for the United Btates and Canad All Countries in the International Mi Evening] Vor Engiand and the Continent and Postal Union. + $3.50) One Year... + 9 see .801One Month... aed MOLUME 54........cccccccececeeccseveseeseses NO. 19,216 i ig -FEELING THEIR IMPORTANCE. regard as the officiousness of the Comptroller, who had taken Bove an Alderman’s pride was jarred by what he chose to all the preparations into his own hands, the city will probably have no exhibit at the International Exposition gt Ions, France. ‘The city is sorry not to be represented, but it will survive tho dis- | @ppointment. , pute forth trivial shoots. @ consider public needs with promptnegs and practical sense. night. have adopted Alderman Curra of Buildings for Manhattan revise the city’s building code. are still busy with the measure to prevent speculation in theatre | stop to the spread | tickets, and are considering ways and means to put of unsightly billboard and electrio advertising. should expect from its Akiermen. dreamed of,” Princeton Club one night this week. it for the beneftt of the city.” yl The city is watching the results with interest. \ ——_——_<4¢=2—____——. UPSIDE DOWN. One of the strange ai of world politica develops in the news of the day. The Vehement friends of Ireland in Congress show themselves bitterly opposed to any measure that secures a pennyworth of advantage to England. Resent- ment generations old toward the power that has withheld independence from the Irish translates itself in the United States into etubdorn Irish opposition to the repeal of the Pan- ‘ama tolls exemption. Yet at this very moment the Government of Great Britain fs spending millions and straining its authority to the verge of civil war to make certain that Home Rule shall have fair play in Ireland. 42 -——___—— Newtown Creek is “a sluggish little inle | + thé United States. aS * sever its upper and lower waters. a J he coal, coke, lumber, stone nage,Walue of #82,500,000. ing material transported through Ne town Creek were | sports from Bosion, Philadelphia and San Francisco. creased in nine years more than $130,000,000, the biggest dumber yards in the city gather about its shores, a channel 125 fect wide and 18 fect deep from the F more than a name to New Yorkers, a “There will be no cheap meat yet awhile,” sighs Qeden Armour, after a tour of inspection to find a bright side, if there be any. Crop conditions, he finds “splendid.” He is well content with “the amount of moisture in the ground.” But he says, “I do not look for a drop in prices of meats either this summer or even next winter. There will be no reduction in prices of fresh meat until there are more cattle ip this country.” And there will be no more cattle in this country until farmers have recovered from the blighting sense that the cost of @ bushel of feed, the price of a cow and the privilege of slaughtering a calf in Maine or Mississipp! are one and all dictated by Mr. Armour and his friends {n the Middle West. : Much more interesting is the evidence of Aldermanic pique, & | feeling akin to dignity, implying in turn eelf-respect—which the pub- lie is glad to eee sprouting in the Board even though it now and oo Since the beginning of the year the Aldermen have steadily gained ground in public esteem. They have ehown a new readiness As a starter they divested themselves of the old petty Privilege | of granting news and fruit stand licenses, They have eupplied a! much needed check for reckless auto driving by an ordinance which makes the minimum jail sentence for epeeders include at least one They have passed an ordinance making it a‘misdemeanor | to publish false and misleading advertisements. This week they proposal to let the Superintendent | They | “The Aldermen have much more power than they have ever | George McAneny, President of the Board, told the | “It is the policy of the present | administration to wake them up and encourage them to make use of EVER SAIL ON NEWTOWN CREEK? FOUR MILE “ORIK” that crowds the Mississippi for com- | mercial honors is one of the many wondets that New Yorkers have to be told about before they realize they posseas them. which forms part of the boundary line between the Borough of Queens and the Borough of _ Brooktyn. But the Merchants’ Association assures us that this mod-| gat streamlet is one of the most important industrial wa! erways in * The mighty Mississippi carries 5,500,000 tons of freight aunually But what about Newtown Cree -. where 5,435,016 tona of freight were handled in the year 1911? nd and cotton carried on the Missis- i, reckoned at an average of 815 per ton, represents a yearly ton- In the year 1912 the copper ore and ucts, the petroleum, lumber, coal, aleohol, chemicals and build- valued at , $225,416,028, an amount greater than the combined value of the ex- The value of the tonnage carried theeugh this little estuary in- Copper interests and When the Federal Government has finished dredging the creek to provide minder hind, A ion of| suggest, me to|new Ami that} proper channel ler of same deserves full) awaken t aiden for expressing his views with | unpatriotic auch fearless sincerity. of this marvel lous country I have|ing through the ® close study of the growing | valued columns, to our flag, due, no doubt, = © our cosmopolitan population. And! jelan T venture to eay that | T no typical American anthem & national emotion. The| which the Metropolitan M jusie of our national anthem is bor-| Art is open to the public free. and from a European B u* # large part of our in-| Open dally, ome f lands it are lethar Free Days at Museum, ¢ FAiitor of Tho Evening World: when 25 cente y ‘thin way to n nation from its Perhaps this Aw a citizen | matter may be worth while discuss. | medium of your AMERICAN, COHEN including Sunda: Free except on Mondays ang Friday: admission is charged, All these things closely concern the safety and comfort of citizens | and imply the sort of practical oversight and action which the city Straight. From ITHOUT men who dream the world would advance but have dreamed have not slept. dreams were the visions of a wit awake mentality, the imaged goals of | purpose. all, For they dr mental | air dreamed, not of the things they w to do or w they wished Fate, unaided by them- selves, would bring to y ing—productive and unproductive, ac tive and idle, come true, t River to the dreams head of navigation, maybe this four mile rivulet will begin to be | Hits From Shap Wits. Please let me know the days during | eum of |in ' : The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, ApriA 2, 1914: The Shoutder Success Talks to Young Men. | Pret Now Tork tread Wonks ‘Day Dreaming,” little, Yet these men who Their Other men have dre: dreams have moved the world not at ned in the sleep of ertia, ‘Their dr not of purpe stles of a lagi med, and their on desire, ‘They cd be, but of the things as for them, ® ure two kinds of dream- So th ‘The first kind often because they are MADE to come true. But the other kind well, they are never anything but dreams So don't fear bein called a “dream- er’ If your dreams are of the right sort. For they will lead you on to bigger and better things, to the things toward which (ey inspire you to. stri A young man without this sort—some call it im- agination, some visualized a cks one of the greatest # ntives that can be given But if you are a dreat other sort—beware! If wean your mind from work to feed tt idle envy or the soap bubbles of lazy vis- loning—wako up! Wake up before those dreams turt Incompetence and Couple “1 wish" failure! with °F wilt Sor | thing bees minds that they can't.—Albany Jour: | na! * 28 e The world is not as bad as s think it, If the good deeds and ry actions wer ded as copiously nd wrong actions, to add a seore 4 to th nt size. Mil- Sentinel e #9 ndisputable evidence ofthe supe- y of woman over man is shown the way she i a new spring hat in the A snows storm and still look absolutely un vonsclous of doing anything out of he ordinary.--Philadelphia Inqujrer, ° . wonderful The discovery of the into nightmares of | the old spirits, book of good liv! There, are me forty dinners ani ten of ¢ Mahdah menus It is declared jow faithfully ¢ the diet lose pounds a week weeks. For me trifle slower. ‘Temperament, ercise count for working’ togethe ths, and wi Milk, cream; olive oll, buckwheat, macaronl, toes, Kr : unfermented walnuts, raisins, All_these are Bett | Spring fever wil | readers to the e letters from dic columns of fy chiefs or make a just and defi modern doctrine of etliciency may be| don't overdo it. Moderation means! yourself of Jealousy before it 1a too summed up in the six words of the| tore happiness than excess, in the! late. old saying, "Make your head save | long run, your heely,"—Deseret News. oR Ret writes: o 8 8 i (Hour months ago t!man and supposed he eared for me, ‘The wecret of getting a hearing in| Met and fell in love with i youn] We correaponded, ying little to si oa oO a le night goon atte mo! | stopped. in having little to say. Albany Jour-1ne he took me home and suddeny|and he replied that he was busy. I . 8 8 put his aris avennd me and. Kissed didn't anawer that letter, me. 1 remonstrated, and when he to do 80, Experience alwaya brings regret} made the sume atte npt on another that it did not come sooner,—Albany Journal, occasion 1 told continue to know “Eat and Grow Thin,” says a new Dutton & Co.) with an introduction by Vance Thompson. ch for each of the four sea- sons of the year, pounds should be lost in three th no ffects sah or rather “Must Nots” of the Mahdah system are interesting, They place a ban, even in combina- tions for cooking pyrposes, pn— bacon, , Love in Springtime. Ve Viticenr shirk their jobs, By Maurice Ketten eays proverb of good ing published (E. P. tions of Oysters, cabbage, prunes, lobsters, nus in the book for pear: dd as many lunches— And these are the hitherto unpublished, that women who fol- he Mahdah rules of usually about two after the first three nm the reduction is a water ices, grape fruit, things. sugar. ing is needed. Cooked tardy, jead creams, wines, beers, also But what ts it, been taken away? environment and ex- much. All things r, twenty to twenty- in 1 condith in cheese, pork, lard, \corn, wheat, oats, white bread, stick candy, pota igs, bananas, grape: pe juice, chestnut ham, | hugely content, fat ‘producing: food: has da of y Vincent’s very much burt, had any respect for me and is there N the epring- time a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love. Bo doe: woman's, And It's perfectly natural that it should, Only—there 1s Jota to be done in the world be- me sides love-mak- | {4 ing. And I hope } not affect any of my 4 xtent of making them Whether you write tution or add up long res or sell handker- ats, your work has nite im upon your dreaming or | with {t,| to partion | py time together, but! Ouisee to youl tion you can take, “D, writes: I like very much, be improper for to do 80? “AL Wo" writ fention to ag! low a little this habit?" Lxercise piled him that I could not him, He seemed more att think she ought to I become jealous. Js there some way of getting rid of your will “Fat and Grow Thin.”’ sl Bere and grow fat,” The Mahdah cooking recipes wiven| in the book leave them out, The omissions make quite a hole in| the resources of the co No disguised starvation follows. We read in the menus delicious sugges- Kk. corned beef and tenderloin. steaks, apples, melons, haddock, peaches, beets, liver, tomato salad, goose, turkey, turnips, squash, spinach, cold game—a bi without string Of course, on the prohibite dishes are ples, puddings, cakes, cus- candies, sweets, rits. fter all, that has Why, just these sugar, oil and alcohol. "t sleep too much” Don't take a cab—walk!” Mr, Thompson, for his part of the book, is humorous over the fat man whom nobody loves, He may not be wholly uncomfortable, Often he is Nevertheless, he is a sight in peace, in war and in love, He quotes: Brillat-Savarin, a medi- : "The fate of na- depends on how they are fed, 1 Savarin “had geen the mighty rench Empire fall to pieces in the Advice to Lovers Do you think he ny way oo which I can make up The voihe man should not have acted as he did, and until he apol do not see what ac- @ young | Correspondence. F “Some time ago I met tortunh my brother a man whom He has visited at my home on several occasions and I have gone out with him. : “I am paying at- hom I love very kes me a good power to rid “I cared for a young suddenly 1 wrote to ask the reason But— butter or Saccharine for what sweeten- Would it me to correspond with him, although he has never asked T want to become hot- acquainted with him.” vertheless#, a girl is not supposed to take the {nitlative in correspondence with a man, starting a as he didn't Should I have re- tt No, as he appeared not to wish to continue the correspondence, i{ Rubber- viany By Sophie Irene Loeb and as to resorting to Ia: mutton, cod, scene stands beans, an el of | were each in twinkling of eye. legisintor sage, The eration. beng.bese I could not but reflect that aches of the every minute mi directly traced to the eleven’ way of doing things. ing letters with the rubber “arrives” in ‘the places of merit. to auswer you. the letter is worth while writin, burdens of the aftermath. whoie life and message. little realizes that in that last much slower pace. a meal, omment upon, pink of i he NOUGH time ft and wrinkles o Ways of Work}, TA AAAAAARARARARAARAARAAA RCD | OOO ey Now Fork Evening World WAS present in Albany during the closing days of the Legislature, | -minute | hundred dollars, all thought of it left methods that In the words of Englishman | who was present, It might well bo Dozens of bills made laws the I think no any other human being could possibly know even the principal merits or de- fecte of each bill—to say nothing of all the various uses or abuses that might come gas a result of its pas- most harmless looking dogument might wreak the most fear- ful havoo for lack of proper consid- A word or a phrase very otten does the oprosite of what it was intende.l. ily, things went throuxh The many ramifications of these various measures that wece intended to be of good use (and might in reality be abuse) must be directly attributed to this mad-rush manner. tragedies of the day and the heart- ht ho hour The business man who doss things et oyt of breath, to the point of send- !an\p He plainly shows to you that he has tco many irons in the fire, and that he waited unt the last minuts You cannot place much confidence in such a ian, is worth while reading before send- Those of us who put things off until tho last minute usually must bear the 8 I know a woman who wrecked hor died in despair for Waiting until too late to send a little The person who dilly-dal- lies and then rushes madly for a train | — qld scramble he is using up as much’ ery as would keop him primed and| tion In fit condition for a long period at a Waiting until the last minute to eat with all its attending results of indigestion, 18 too well known toj ‘And when you come 19 iL in wil @ matter of HABIT, While the day ts over when - can follow the trail of the snail, 1 while each must be alert or will be passed by, yet the need for mak- things avoids To NEW filrtations ev And, as he bailies forth, are a vast improvement on nature? the strong solution of domesticity. . Nowadays ma: more necessary than evil. rekindled once it hai When a man of forty insists on too well. A bachelor who avoids women f rose-fever, Comeright, 1914, by The Pree Pubitching Co, (The New York Prenine World). m N* the young Spring reviving old desires, Pp And, with the haberdasher’s artful aid, , Himeelf like unto Solomon attir His eyes and heart aglow with sentiment— Lo, every damsel ‘neath a flowered hat Looks like a “SOUL-MATE” straight from Heaven sent! Nature may paint the beauties of the lily and the rose, but the “beau- + ties” of Fifth avenue are all hand-colored. And who will deny that they ~ +> ery youth aspires, i" on conquest bent, A husband {s like a Hngerle frock, it 1s so hard to find one that won't pinch on the expenses, stretch on the truth, and shrink or fade tn > jage may be regarded merely as a ‘necessary evil,” but” judging from the pessimism of those who have missed it it is a whole lot % A woman's love !s a slow flame, which continues to smoulder long after the fire is dead; a man’s love is a skyrocket, which never can be sputtered out. remaining single it is either because he doesn’t understand women at all or because he understands them for fear of falling in love and marry- | Ing would avoid the hanging gardens of Babylon for fear of getting the The Blest .... Qhovright | (ooxind out at shadows fleeting “From her window's trellised bars, Now her dear old eyes send greeting To the near yet far-off stars. And her memory's never shady, Clear and bright is every page— She's a peaceful, sweet old lady In the nightfall of her age, She has known life's joys and sor- rows, Trod thro’ flower paths and wéeds, And she thinks on dim to-morrows |. As she calmly tells her beads, Life's receding-4n the distance, n see the jasper walls, And she'll offer no resistance | When the heavenly Master calls. a Wo CHAPTER XIl. 'TRANGE as it may seem, as soon as Jack had heard, and S believed, my explanation of bes why I had drawn the two me. The ease with which he had ac- cepted my vague explanation, the freedom I enjoyed from questionng, tended to banish it from my mind. 1 at once bought the baby carriage, the twenty-five dollar one, although I Al termed “rubber- | a4 strongly tempted to get the other, | stamp legisia.| But as it was our first purgbase in dist of tego oe that store and Jack had to Spen an account in the rogular manner 1 triod to be satisfed. @ Now that baby had her carriage, she must have a bonnet. So while Mrs. Banks was there to tc her I telephoned Nell Gr: asked her to go with mo to choose one, She was delighted and sug- gested that 1 bring the cout along, 80 we would be sure whatever I bought would go nicely with tt. I, of course, acted upon her sug- gestion, and, wrapping the coat care- fully, We started out. At first we visited the stores in the neighbor- hood, but they carried nothing that did not look cheap and common when | compared with the coat. So Nell sug- | gested that we go down to some of the big shops. Woe would be sure to find something there. Bo we took a car, and on Thirty-fourth street we found the dearest baby bonnets—dear in both senses of the word. Dut after seeing them I knew I would never be satisfied with anything cheaper. The ono I bought was a perfect mutch for the Ad over which the saleswoman wad Intended spending not more than a dollar and a half at the out- side for the bonnet, but the one I had wrapped cost four dollars and fa quarter, Nell then suggested that we look at the coats. She said I an por the phrase “dictated, but not read,” thus| “could get some idea of how much putting the blame of mistake on the| Jack's sister had spent for the stenographer, is rarely the man who | baby. Nothing loath, I followed the sales- woman to the coats, and to my sur- prise, they had an almost exact duplicate of baby's. “It ia only eighteen dollars, and the very latest If] thing in baby coats," the woman it| told us. “There! You see It would never have done to put a cheap bonnet on with an eighteen dollar Nell opined as we left the re, ‘Indeed it wouldn’ returned, not thinking how olt of place both cloak and bonnet were on & baby whose parents’ sole income was $150 @ month IN NEW YORK, Jack was of course delighted when I dressed the baby up for his inspec- And when we, like two chil- dren, put her in the carriage and cov- ered her with the dainty robe Mrs. Somers gave her he boasted in a ideful voice: “She certainly looks like a million dollar kid, all right, doesn't she Sie” never asking how much the bonnet cost. In fact, Jack # tioned me, but 1 was d@ little afraid he would ask about the bonnet, it hairs,| was so lovely. 1, of Soure intended en- cely ever ques- leat Have a time for eg and to save in some way, Reedn't in ite time! worry, gven bad he be inowa: But it \ 1914 by ‘The Prost Publishing Chapters From By Dale Drummond Ooorright, 1914, by The Presa Publishing Co. (The By Eugene Geary. 0 (The New York Heening Mork Now her wrinkled face is shaded, As she looks across the years At the scenes of youth unfaded, Till her eyes are dimmed with tears, Grassy graves rise up befere her, She can read each tered one's scroll, And a wave of peace steals o'er : hes She is last upon the roll, Visions of the bright hereafter Kor the moment pass from view, When the children’s merry laughter Brings the olden joys anew. And they tenderly caress her— Pour their music in her cars, For she loves them God bless hert In the sunset of her years, man’s Life w York Evening World) was easier not to discuss such things with him, Jack had begun to show the strain, The unpaid grocer bill, which | never wave a thought, worried him. And although the doctor had told him to take his time and had even said he could pay a little from time t he also allowed that to (as pressed it) “get on his nerves,” "Our only hope of getting along, Suo, of ever having anything, is to keep ont of debt.” And he was con- stantly trying to think of ways HE coull economize without its affecting me or the baby. Jack had never minded hard work, but the need in his nature for fun, eitement, even the simple pleasures d to Induljo in before the baby the occasional theatre — or card Was storming within him; and T was too blind to see, or, had I seen, I probably should not have cared, I wag too busy too much came, taken up with home and baby. He must earn more, make more, then we could do those things again, But Joyonsness was with Jack an organte needxand he substituted more work, more violont exercise for that need, dfe was always kind and loving, but’ was gften absent minded and ree Shun tq aa not app to take the same rest in things as for- merly. I bad, after mother left, gradually returned to my old way,of a ory the bills to lap over from one week, or month, until the next. Baby needed 80 many things. I was out so much with her that I also had to have more to weur, more street clothes, My hats, even while I often trimmed them myself, cost alto- gether more than | could afford, When IT saw the expensive, latest style trimmings I could not content myself with anything else. My shoes were also a big item, I had a small, well-shaped foot, and was always proud of being well shod, But the styles in footwear changed often, And’ as often as I could or dared I bought the latest in shoes, paving necessarily a big price for them, “Here is the money, dear, Make tt 0 as far as you can,” and Jack hand. ed me his monthly salary as usual, T counted tt. “Why, Jac! T exclaimed, ‘4t ts ten dollars short!” ud know, Sue. T stopped and gave 6 doctor ten dollars. He has got he paid and we may as well com. mence some time. That ts the only way he'll ever get it-—to pay him be- fore we use the money for some. thing else.” k “I don't Know how I can get through the month,” f replied. “It is almost impossible when I have tt all,” think. ing of the bills again accumulating my prea, Steven: ¥ “You w ave to manage soi Then, “I've hada hard dey ¢ office. The market went ail to pieces, I'd like to go out some where, I wish we could afford to the theatre,” bel? “Why not go?" I asked. “It comte two dollars." “Not while that grocer remains une paid, But ll tell you what we will do, Sue. Mrs, Banks is here and can stay with Emelie, and we will to the movies. Come along, dogs will be ne peo @ littl Hie bors) the a §3th ~